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- Richard B Hovey, Treena Delormier, Alex M McComber, Lucie Lévesque, and Debbie Martin.
- 1 McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
- Qual Health Res. 2017 Jul 1; 27 (9): 1278-1287.
AbstractThe intention of this article is to demonstrate how Indigenous and allied health promotion researchers learned to work together through a process of Two-Eyed Seeing. This process was first introduced as a philosophical hermeneutic research project on diabetes prevention within an Indigenous community in Quebec Canada. We, as a research team, became aware that hermeneutics and the principles of Haudenosaunee decision making were characteristic of Two-Eyed Seeing. This article describes our experiences while working with each other. Our learning from these interactions emphasized the relational aspects needed to ensure that we became a highly functional research team while working together and becoming Two-Eyed Seeing partners.
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